A Great Horned Owls Rehab Journey

A Great Horned Owls Rehab Journey

A Great Horned Owls Rehab Journey

5 minute read –

Disclaimer: This post contains photos from the owl’s recent surgery, including images of needles, the removed talon, stitches being placed and a small amount of blood. 

The Story

On March 11, 2025, a great horned owl came into our care under less-than-ideal circumstances. She was found hunched over a dead chicken in a coop – weak, disheveled and clearly in need of help. Upon intake, our team discovered she had a previously broken wing, a severely damaged and infected left talon (an old injury), and was absolutely crawling with lice. It was clear she’d been fending for herself for a while, and it had taken a toll.

Our team immediately got to work: treating the infection in her talon, getting rid of the lice and monitoring her wing. While the infection proved stubborn, her talon showed no signs of recovery. After careful assessment, our animal care team and veterinarians made the difficult but necessary decision to amputate.

From Left to Right:
The owl when she first arrived
A closer look at the talon after a round of antibiotics

You can clearly see the size difference in the infected talon
Her old wing damage – this has long since healed and does not need further treatment

Surgery Day

On the evening of Thursday April 10th, she was brought into town by our Animal Care Manager Jan and Visitor Services Coordinator Britt. She underwent surgery at Alpine Veterinary Clinic under the skilled care of the Amber Antler Vet’s Cassandra and Julianna with Morgan assisting. After some deliberation about the best point of removal, the team carefully amputated the damaged talon, sealed and bandaged the area, and monitored her closely.

She was slow to wake from anesthesia, but once she did – still a little groggy – she was safely transported back to the Preserve by staff member Britt. In true owl fashion, the moment the kennel lid came off, she was alert and ready. She quickly flew to her perch, a sure sign that her fighting spirit remained intact.

By the next morning, she’d already removed her own bandage (classic owl), but thankfully, the incision was untouched and healing well.

Below are photos from her procedure:

Photos of the surgery by Britt Forsythe

Healing in Peace

For her continued recovery, we moved her into a quiet, outdoor flight pen in the back of the Animal Care building. While she had briefly spent time in our main aviary, it became clear she wasn’t a fan of the spotlight. Even with low visitor traffic, she showed signs of stress – so we listened. Her well-being comes first.

In the smaller flight pen, she’s been thriving – thanks to our dedicated animal care team Michael, Melissa and Jan. On Thursday, April 24th she finished her medication, had her stitches removed and she’s bright-eyed and alert.

This tells us – she’s ready!

The great horned owl back to herself in the flight pen.

Flying Free

We are incredibly happy to share that the Great Horned Owl in our care has been successfully released back into the wild!

Originally, her public release was scheduled for April 26th. However, during a pre-release veterinary check, our team identified some swelling near her incision site. Out of an abundance of caution and in the best interest of her recovery, we made the decision to postpone her release and monitor her a little longer.

May 1st, after a follow-up veterinary assessment confirmed the swelling had resolved, we acted quickly. In wildlife rehabilitation, there is always a delicate balance – keeping an animal in care long enough to fully recover, but not so long that it hinders their return to the wild. 

While we had originally planned to make this a public event, the well-being of the animal must always come first. She had been showing all the necessary signs that she was very ready to go and we didn’t want to prolong her stay unnecessarily. We are committed to doing what’s best for every wild patient that comes through our doors.

Mellissa, Jiawei and Britt released her near the Caribou platform just after 5pm on Thursday the 1st. After spending 51 days in our rehabilitation centre, she burst from her kennel and took off. We followed her and found her happily resting in a stand of aspen. Once she had acclimated, off she flew! It was so wonderful for us to see her spread her beautiful wings!

Thank you for your continued support of wildlife rehabilitation and the work we do here every day.

Taking flight for the first time in the wild after 51 days in rehabilitation.

She rested in a stand of Aspen while she took in her surroundings before taking off again, out of sight.

Every life we help comes with a cost — from medical care to daily support. Our recent work with the great horned owl is just one example of the specialized care wildlife need to get a second chance. 💛

Please consider donating to support our Wildlife Rehabilitation Program. Every dollar helps us continue this vital work. 🦉

Thank you for helping us help them.

Brittney Forsythe

Brittney Forsythe

She/Her - Visitor Services Coordinator

Brittney joined the Wildlife preserve in the summer of 2023. Growing up on Northern Vancouver Island, surrounded by the temperate rainforest, nature and animals have always been a part of her life. It exploded into a passion, when she started her dog walking business in 2017 and she began spending 6-7 days a week in the forest, rain or shine! This sparked an even deeper appreciation for the cyclical nature of the land and how all of the plants & animals work together symbiotically. She is forever ‘that girl’ on the hike, pointing out different rocks and plants, explaining their origin or what they could be used for medicinally. Brittney and her dog Cedar relocated to the Yukon to help care for 31 sled dogs. She is so excited to expand her local knowledge as a part of the Preserve team.

867-456-7400
 Brittney@yukonwildlife.ca

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Aspen Seeds Needed

Aspen Seeds Needed

Aspen Seeds Needed

5 minute read –

Beginning this spring and continuing over the next three years, Yukon Seed and Restoration in partnership with Yukon Government’s Wildland Fire Management Branch will collect 6,000 g of native Trembling aspen (Populus tremuloides) seed to use in projects throughout the territory for its fire resistant characteristics. This will include planting in the Whitehorse south fuel break, a 365 hectare fuel break being built to protect the city in case of a severe wildfire.

The Yukon climate is characterized by a short growing season, cold temperatures, and limited water availability. These specific environmental conditions require Yukon native seeds to be used in this project to give the trees the best chance at survival.

Have a favourite trembling aspen stand? Let us know on iNaturalist! Photo credit: Sophia Slater, YSR.

We are aiming to collect aspen seed from the Southern Lakes and Yukon Plateau North/Central ecoregions, but are interested in populations all over the territory. 

Who Are We?

Yukon Seed and Restoration, or YSR, is a plant focused environmental consulting company majority owned by the Na-Cho Nyäk Dun Development Corporation. We provide ecological restoration through land reclamation projects, honourable harvesting of Yukon native plant species, and invasive species management. 

We strive to make the land good through our work with First Nation, industry, and government clients. 

(Some of) our team. Photo Credit: Ainsley Taggett, YSR

One of the ways we support ongoing restoration work across the Yukon is through the Yukon Native Seed Bank and our Hudzi ni plant processing facility. We aim replace non-native seeds used on restoration projects with Yukon native seed that is better suited to our northern climate. We also develop workshops and programming to build capacity throughout the Yukon.

Aspen Identification

Trembling aspen is a deciduous tree that grows up to 20 m tall. They are a clonal species that reproduce by sending out shoots along their lateral roots. In a small area, most likely all individual aspen stems are genetically the same. They are dioecious, meaning that individuals are either male or female, and the female trees produce the seeds. 

Trembling aspen have smooth greenish-white, sometimes powdery, bark with black markings. The bark does not peel like on birch trees. The leaves are smooth and round with a nearly flat base and a pointed tip. They shake or tremble in the wind, giving the tree its name.

Trembling aspen bark (left), leaves (middle), and stand (right). Photo credits: YSR (left, middle), Ainsley Taggett, YSR (right).

On average, male trees flower in late April, and females in early May. Identifying flowering populations helps us to prepare for seed collection. Flowering male catkins are 2.5-7 cm long and red with white fluff, whereas flowering female catkins are 2-5 cm long and less conspicuous than their male counterparts.

Flowering male catkin (left) and flowering female catkin (right). Photo credits: iNaturalist (left), Hilary Lefort, YSR (right).

Aspen seed collection is a very time sensitive task. Later in May, female catkins turn green and lengthen. Eventually the seed pods open, releasing the white, fluffy seeds. Once the aspen seeds start to fluff out, it may only be 48-72 hours before the entire seed crop has dispersed. Usually this falls around the end of May or beginning of June, so beginning in mid-May we check on stands frequently to assess the seed crop, looking at the fruiting female catkins and breaking them open to see the seed inside.

We aim to collect the female catkins when they are green (left), just before the seeds are released. We can confirm their readiness by looking at the seed: yellowy seed (middle) is immature, and brown seed (right) is mature. Photo credits: iNaturalist (left), Moench (middle, right).

Aspens and Fire

Wildfire plays a critical role in Yukon ecosystems and has been used traditionally by Yukon First Nations to manage forests. However, due to a history of fire suppression and an increase in temperatures caused by climate change, fires are becoming more frequent and more severe in the territory.

Pushup from a muskrat in the Preserve's Moose Pond with a wide view of the land including snowy mountains and boreal forest. Photo Credit; Rebecca Carter.

The Ethel Lake burn near Mayo/Stewart Crossing. Photo credit: Naomi Butterfield, YSR.

Conifer trees like white spruce and lodgepole pine pose a greater risk than deciduous trees in wildfires, because of their flammable bark, relatively high density, and buildup of ground and ladder fuels. Deciduous trees like trembling aspen are relatively fire resistant due to their higher moisture content, lower density, limited ladder fuels, and shading of the understory, which protects it from moisture loss. Additionally, trembling aspen grows quickly in burned soil.

How Can You Help?

This scale of project will require many aspen populations. Over the next three years, if you see aspen populations with lots of trees, and specifically with female flowers/catkins (see Aspen Identification), let us know!

Join our iNaturalist platform to tag populations of reproductive aspens and contribute to the reforestation of the fuel break. Email photos and locations to us at matthew@yukonseed.ca.

If you are interested in helping out with collections, we are looking for casual labour and volunteers at the end of May and June. Stay tuned to our Facebook for seed collection dates. Contact matthew@yukonseed.ca for more information or to get involved.

References

Government of Alberta. 3 August 2012. How different tree species impact the spread of wildfire. Government of Alberta. Available from: https://www1.agric.gov.ab.ca/$department/deptdocs.nsf/all/formain15744/$FILE/tree-species-impact-wildfire-aug03-2012.pdf 

Mackinnon A, Pojar J, Coupé J. 2021. Plants of Northern British Columbia, Expanded Second Edition.

Moench RD. Aspen Seed Collection. Part of Nursery Information Series. For Colorado State Forest Service.

Shinneman DJ, Baker WL, Rogers PC, Kulakowski D. 2013. Fire regimes of quaking aspen in the Mountain West. Forest Ecology and Management, 299: 22-34.

Sophia Slater

Sophia Slater

Intermediate Restoration Ecologist

Sophia was one of the Interpretive Wildlife Guides and animal care assistants at the Preserve. She moved to the Yukon from Ontario, where she just graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Biology from Nipissing University.  Now you can find her at Yukon Seed and Restoration as an Intermediate Restoration Ecologist or summiting the many beautiful mountains in the Yukon this summer! 

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The Humble Dzäna

The Humble Dzäna

The Humble Dzäna

8 minute read –

When welcoming folks to the Yukon Wildlife Preserve, us interpreters in the Front Cabin often say something along the lines of “you’ll find 10 Yukon animals here,” referring to the ones in our care and pictured on our map. But of course, so many other animals call the Preserve home too. Like the tsäl (sik sik/gopher/arctic ground squirrel) who are the 11th unofficial species that you can find above ground only in the spring and summer!

Another newer resident on the Preserve are the dzäna (muskrats). A mansion of a muskrat lodge has emerged in the moose pond over the past year and has remained visible even when covered by snow this winter! While guiding a bus tour recently, this seemling isolated home became the center of attention while we were looking for the elusive kanday (moose). The visitors and I mused “how many muskrats are in that thing?!” I did know a pair of muskrats had moved into the marsh a couple of years ago, and now maybe there’s a whole family living there hosting many parties (yes, I had to force that line so I can say that a group of muskrats are called a “party”). 

But while joking on my tour, I realised that I did not know much about this animal and this inspired me to dedicate some time to the humble muskrat.  

Muskrat copyright and photo credit: Derald-Lobay

Muskrats are often confused with tsà’ (beavers), and though they are very similar, they are not closely related at all. This is a neat example of convergent evolution: two animals may end up looking the same and acting in similar ways because of the shared environment that they live in. Both muskrats and beavers are semi-aquatic rodents, have water-resistant brown and sleek fur, build their lodges in shallow water or along the water’s edge, and forage on the surrounding plants.

When I told my partner that I was writing about muskrats, he made sure that I was including the story of muskrat’s heroic act. Growing up in Manitoba, we both learned about the special place the muskrat holds in Cree and Anishinaabe Creation stories.

Small details can vary with the storyteller but muskrat’s role remains the same. 

As written in his book Ojibway Heritage, elder Basil H. Johnston from Wasauksing First Nation begins the story with the Great Flood, where only the birds and water animals survived and Sky Woman came to rest on the back of a turtle. She asked the water animals to dive to the bottom and collect soil so that she can create land. Many animals – the loon, the mink, the beaver – dove down, down, down but none returned with soil. All seemed hopeless. Finally, the little muskrat softly said “I’ll go.” Everyone laughed as there was no way the tiny muskrat could make it to the bottom when all of the other animals had failed. Despite being ridiculed, the determined muskrat disappeared into the water and was gone for a long time. The animals and Sky Woman stared helplessly into the water until muskrat finally floated to the surface. Sky Woman lifted muskrat’s body onto the turtle and there, clutched tightly in muskrat’s paw, was a small clump of Earth. She took the Earth and spread it on the back of the turtle. The wind began to blow while Sky Woman and the animals danced together, spreading the Earth farther until it grew into Turtle Island. The animals celebrated and mourned together for without muskrat’s great sacrifice, Earth and all life would not exist. I personally like the story ending with Sky Woman breathing life back into muskrat’s little body so that he can celebrate too.

A traditional Anishinabe inspired Painting by: Carl Ray (1943 – 1979) of a muskrat. The Muskrat reminds us to be open to the creative possibilities of living in balance with Creation.

This story intertwines many moral and ethical values tied together with ecological knowledge. Muskrats are indeed very small, weighing only 2-to-4 pounds compared to the much larger 40-to-70 pound beavers. They are incredible swimmers and can dive underwater for 15-20 minutes at a time. When they dive, their heart rate slows and their body temperature plummets to help them conserve oxygen. Small hairs between their toes and their long, rat-like tail helps to propel them through the water. These are all helpful adaptations when you need to forage for plants and food all winter since muskrats do not store food like beavers. It’s no wonder that the small but mighty muskrat could swim to the bottom of the water with all of these traits.

Instead of building dams and lodges made from felling trees like beavers, muskrats build their lodge homes and feeding huts (called push-ups) out of plants like cattails, sedges, and reeds, packed together with mud. As in the story, their front paws are small with long claws for digging and holding building material, and their homes are shaped like the ball of Earth they held on to.

a brown blob of earth pushes up through the snowy icy surface of the moose habitat pond where a muskrat makes its home. Photo Credit; Rebecca Carter.

A brown blob of earth pushes up through the snowy icy surface of the moose habitat pond where a muskrat family makes its home. Photo Credit: Rebecca Carter.

In the winter, you may see push-ups on frozen ponds and lakes. When the water begins to freeze, muskrats will chew a hole in the ice and push up clumps of material, creating an enclosed and insulated resting hut on top of the ice. Like ice fishing shacks on a lake, muskrats can pop out of the water and take a break from swimming long distances, have some lunch and take a breather all while staying protected from the harsh elements and predators.

These push-ups are also fast frozen piles of fresh plants that offer higher levels of protein, nitrogen, and other nutrients that are lacking in the low quality winter plants. These push-ups are great food sources for caribou, moose and bison and may help them make it through the winter with a nutrient boost. In the summer, waterfowl and marsh birds lounge and nest on the lodges, while snakes and reptiles use the muskrat tunnels and homes for places to rest and thermoregulate. I can’t help but think of muskrat’s desire and determination to help collect Earth as a parallel to the muskrat’s push-ups and lodges for providing food and shelter for other animals throughout the year.

a brown blob of earth pushes up through the snowy icy surface of the moose habitat pond where a muskrat makes its home. Photo Credit; Rebecca Carter.

Fall, muskrat pushup with birds soaring above the pushup. Photo credit: Britt Forsythe.

Muskrats are also resilient and adaptable. They can have 2-3 litters per year with an average of 6 kits per litter making their population relatively resistant to disease, predation pressures, and they can survive through drought years by eating a variety of foods and getting water from the plants. Despite this resilience, there is emerging evidence that muskrat populations are declining across North America. The exact cause remains unclear for these declines, but a loss of critical wetland habitats and the connectivity between wetlands may have a large impact on populations.

I read this quote from elder Benton Banai that is fitting here:

 “No matter that marshes have been drained and their homes destroyed in the name of progress, the muskrats continue to grow and multiply. The Creator has made it so muskrats will always be with us because of the sacrifice that our little brother made for all of us many years ago when the Earth was covered with water.”

Muskrats play such an important role in the ecology of wetlands, Indigenous cultures and economic importance for trappers that we cannot overlook the muskrats and their habitat needs. One of the values that we can learn from the Creation story is that humans and animals are interconnected and living together harmoniously ensures the survival of all. 

Pushup from a muskrat in the Preserve's Moose Pond with a wide view of the land including snowy mountains and boreal forest. Photo Credit; Rebecca Carter.

From the muskrat, we can learn to be determined and courageous when faced with a seemingly impossible task, to cooperate and help one another, to do acts not for the recognition but because it is the right thing to do, and to honour and respect all creatures regardless of their size. So the next time you visit the Wildlife Preserve, see if you could spot the small, humble, determined dzäna in the marsh. We can and do have a lot to learn from our wildlife companions.

References

Department of Environment. 2024. Common Muskrat. Yukon Government, Department of Enivronment. https://yukon.ca/en/common-muskrat

Errington, P.L. 1939. Reaction of muskrat populations to drought. Ecology, 20(2): 168-186. 

Hindle, A.G., et al. 2006. Body cooling and the diving capabilities of muskrats (Ondatra zibethicus) A test of the adaptive hypothermia hypothesis. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, 114: 232-241. https://sci-hub.se/10.1016/j.cbpa.2006.03.001 

Hinterland Who’s Who. 1986. Muskrat. Environment and Climate Change Canada, Canadian Wildlife Federation. https://www.hww.ca/en/wildlife/mammals/muskrat.html

Jung, T.S., Stotyn, S.A., and Larter, N.C. 2019. Freezer meals: comparative value of muskrat (Ondatra zibethicus) push-ups as late-winter forage for a northern ungulate. European Journal of Wildlife Research, 65:61.https://doi.org/10.1007/s10344-019-1301-7

MacGregor, D. 2013. Teachings from the Muskrat. Muskrat Magazine. https://muskratmagazine.com/teachings-from-the-muskrat/

Sadowski, C., & Bowman, J. 2021. Historical surveys reveal a long-term decline in muskrat populations. Ecology and Evolution, 11(12): 7557-7568. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7588

Yukon Native Language Centre. 2002. Southern Tutchone Noun Dictionary. Retrieved from: https://ynlc.ca/

Rebecca Carter

Rebecca Carter

Senior Wildlife Interpreter

Rebecca joined the Wildlife Preserve in the summer of 2020 after moving from Manitoba to the beautiful and wild Yukon. Rebecca earned a degree in Biology with honours from the University of Winnipeg studying behaviour in mule deer (one of her top 20 favourite animals.. it’s hard to choose!). She loves connecting with others through nature and sharing stories and knowledge about the animals at the preserve with visitors.

867-456-7400
rebecca@yukonwildlife.ca

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